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“I don't believe that you protect people by throwing them in cages,” Rohrabacher told attendees. “For us to be taking people for smoking a weed and putting them in prison or jail for that is a travesty. It's against everything our founding fathers believed in and somehow we got away from that.”

Rohrabacher has long acknowledged that he frequently smoked weed in his younger days, and that he's grateful he was never busted, given that back in the late 1960s simply possessing a joint could land you in jail for six months. To even qualify for the Nov. 2012 ballot, supporters will have to gather 10,000 signatures and raise at least $1 million to get on the average Californian's radar screen.

Unlike Prop. 19, which would have legalized recreational pot use for adults but failed at the polls last year, however, Gray's bill doesn't contain any language adding new criminal penalties for providing pot to minors, nor does it add new limits to how much weed you can grow, which explains why most Northern California residents opposed it.

In any case, the fact that a prominent and popular Republican lawmaker is lending his name to a bill that would effectively legalize weed–and do so at a well-attended fundraiser at a mainstream and respectable establishment like the Newport Beach Vineyard & Winery–suggests that maybe, just maybe, this is an idea that, like a fine wine, has finally reached its time.

Award-winning investigative journalist Nick Schou is managing editor of OC Weekly. He is the author of Kill the Messenger: How the CIA’s Crack Cocaine Controversy Destroyed Journalist Gary Webb (Nation Books 2006), which provided the basis for the 2014 Focus Features release starring Jeremy Renner and the L.A. Times-bestseller Orange Sunshine: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love’s Quest to bring Peace, Love and Acid to the World, (Thomas Dunne 2009). He is also the author of The Weed Runners (2013) and Spooked: How the CIA Manipulates the Media and Hoodwinks Hollywood (2016).